Showing posts with label End of year review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label End of year review. Show all posts

31 December 2025

2025: a year that must be
remembered for far more than
than Trump’s rule and his
violence, vulgarity and vitriol

The sun sets on another year … sunset beneath the Fortezza in Rethymnon earlier this year (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

This year seems to have been dominated by war and violence in Russia and Ukraine, in Gaza, Israel and Palestine, continuing wars and violence involving the US, Iran, Yemen, Sudan and Nigeria, the continuing rise in antimsemitism, Islamophobia and racism everywhere, and by the upsurge in ugly right-wing nationalism in Britain and across the world that hijacks the name of Christianity and its symbolism without heeding any of its values, teachings or demands.

The changes in the world this year included the return of Donald Trump to power in the US, the death of Pope Francis, the election of Pope Leo, the resignation of Archbishop Justin Welby, and the appointment of his successor, Bishop Sarah Mullally.

This year also marked the 80th anniversaries of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the liberation of the death camps, the end of the Holocaust, VE Day and VJ Day, and the end of World War II. This year would also have marked the 80th anniversary of the marriage of my parents, who waited until the end of World War II to get married on 8 September 1945.

Michael D Higgins, who retired last month as President of Ireland after two seven-year terms of office, was a life-long supporter of CND and many other campaigns I was involved in. We have known each other since the Labour Party conference in Cork in 1973, and I only wish that the values that marked his 14-year presidency could be mirrored by other world leaders today.

With President Michael D Higgins and Brendan Howlin during the 2011 Presidential election campaign at the Wexford Ambassadors initiative in Iveagh House, Dublin … President Higgins retired last month after two seven-year terms in office

One of the emotional difficulties of having moved from Ireland to England is not being able to attend the funerals of dear friends and family members.

Don Buckley was a lifelong friend, a work colleague in The Irish Times for many decades, and my second cousin on the Crowley side of the family. His paternal grandmother and my maternal grandmother were sisters, and although his family live in Mallow, Co Cork, I knew him since childhood due to the amount of time he spent in hospitals in Dublin because of his haemophilia.

He encouraged me to follow him into journalism, and visited me in Wexford while I was with the Wexford People trying to persuade me to move to The Irish Times. He was a brave and pioneering journalist, who achieved national prominence for his work on fake charities, the ‘Heavy Gang’ and the ‘Kerry Babies’ case. He was a bon viveur and I enjoyed his parties and dinners, but we also shared similar political values and hopes and many cultural interests.

Other former colleagues from those days in The Irish Times who died during the years include Johnny Hughes, Ed Moloney, a former Northern Editor, Mickey McConnell and the writer Mary Russell, and Philip Molloy from my days with the Wexford People.

Father Louis Brennan, who died on 12 August, had been the Rector of Gormanston, and was perhaps the most inspiring teacher I had in my schooldays. He encouraged my interests in debating, drama and development and human rights issues, got me on stage, involved me in carol singing at Christmas, and counted me in on a drama production during the Easter holidays in 1969. Later, he was Minister Provincial of the Franciscan Province of Ireland, Definitor General of the Order, Secretary General of the Order.

Canon Billy Marshall, who died at the age of 90 on 26 September, had been the Vice-Principal of the Church of Ireland Theological College when I was training for ordination, and our lives overlapped in many ways. The Revd Canon Dr William John Marshall had spent a decade in North India with the Dublin University Mission to Chota Nagpur and USPG (1962-1972). Back in Ireland, he was Assistant Chaplain at Trinity College Dublin (1973-1976), where he completed his doctoral research on the Church of North India, and later was the Rector of Rathmichael (1976-1992), Chancellor of Christ Church Cathedral (1990-2002), and Vice-Principal of CITC (1992-2002).

He was a life-long supporter of USPG and he was one of the ‘go-to’ people when I was planning doctoral research on Irish Anglican missionaries. He continued his engagement with both CITC (later CITI) when I was on the staff and with Christ Church Cathedral when I was a chapter member.

Canon Walter Lewis died on 5 March aged 79. I first got to know him when I was on a student placement with the Irish School of Ecumenics on the Shankill Road in Belfast in the early 1980s. His style of ministry then impressed me so much that he was one of three priests I later asked to sign my pre-ordination papers in 2000, along with Canon Norman Ruddock and the Revd Robert Kingston.

The Revd Dr Ron Elsdon, who was 81 when he died on 25 July, was ordained a year before me, and together we shared in many mission projects. I first met him when he was a lecturer in geology and UCD, and we joked at times about the tectonic shift from geology to theology.

The Revd Mark Wilson, who died on 29 August, was originally Castlecomer, Co Kilkenny. Mark’s ministry brought him to parishes in Ireland, the UK, and the Algarve in Portugal, he was an army chaplain in Northern Ireland and Germany, and for 12 years he was the chaplain of Tallaght University Hospital, Dublin.

Canon Robert Deane, who died on 21 September, was the same age as me. We were canons of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, at the same time, and when he was the Rector of Swords, with Donabate and Kilsallaghan (2000-2018), he invited me to preach in his churches, to do occasional Sunday duty, and to conduct a baptism in Saint Patrick’s Church, Donabate. He also made the church in Donabate available one year for the Ash Wednesday retreat for CITI staff and students, and I remember his kindness when he was the acting chaplain in Tallaght Hospital.

Canon Ian Coulter, who died on 22 November, was the Canon Treasurer of Saint Canice’s Cathedral, Kilkenny and priest-in-charge of Templemore. We regularly bumped into each other in Kilkenny, where he was active in many civic, charitable and local organisations in Kilkenny, including Kilkenny Archaeological Society, the Rotary Club, Kilkenny Arts Festival, Saint Canice’s Credit Union, the Good Shepherd Centre and the Butler Gallery.

Father Dermod McCarthy, who died at 83, was once the editor of religious programmes at RTÉ. He was part of the team that produced the ground-breaking Radharc programmes for RTÉ from 1965, including documentaries on the famine in Nigeria and the last interview with Oscar Romero before he was martyred in 1980. Dermod was the administrator of the Pro-Cathedral, Dublin, from 1982 to 1991, and the editor of religious programmes until 2007.

Canon Michael Woods died on 17 December, a week before Christmas and only days after he had visited us in Stony Stratford. At different times he had been deputy principal and warden of the House of the Epiphany, the Anglican theological college in Kuching.

Other people I had known in Church life and who died this year include John Martin of CMS, from Australia – we travelled together on a number of church ventures, including China and Egypt; Brother Kevin Crowley of the Capuchins at Church Street; and Sister Stanislaus Kennedy (Sister Stan).

Recording Hiroshima Day reflections for Christian CND and the Anglican Pacifist Fellowship at the Japanese Peace Pagoda at Willen Lake

The writer and historian Dr Brid McGrath was also a long-time supporter of the Irish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Another long-time supporter of CND, John Goodwillie, died last December, although I only heard of his death well into this year.

Dr Martin Mansergh, who died aged 78, was known to many for his political role alongside Charlie Haughey and Bertie Aherne. But now that both he and Haughey are dead, I can tell how we once met quietly in Lincoln’s Inn at the back of TCD and Government Buildings, where he persuaded me to draft a speech for Haughey on nuclear disarmament. He was an academic historian, and at one reception in the Taoiseach’s office during Aherne’s tenure, we ended up having a lengthy discussion on how his ancestor Bryan Mansergh had acquired Ballybur Castle from my ancestor John Comerford in the 1650s and how the Mansergh family had usurped the Comerford family.

Martin was quietly supportive of the CND, the Anti-Apartheid Movement and other campaigns and during the 1798 bicentenary encouraged my research on the role of clergy and members of the Church of Ireland.

Another quiet supporter of CND was Henry Mountcharles, who died on 18 June at 74. Although he never paid his subscription or had a fundraiser at Slane Castle, he donated to the Festival of Life long before he ever succeeded as the 8th Marquess Conyngham.

Peter Watkins, the filmmaker best-known for The War Game also died this year. I once borrowed The War Game from the Revd George Ferguson and the peace film library of the Glencree Centre in Belgrave Square, Rathmines, for Irish CND and was surprised to find the small theatre in Liberty Hall was filled beyond capacity, with many people disappointed at not being able to get in.

This year marked the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and I was invited to record Hiroshima Day addresses for Christian CND and Anglican Pacifist Fellowship and for the Peace and Neutrality Alliance in Ireland. Later, on the evening of 6 August, Charlotte and I attended the annual commemorations at the Japanese Peace Pagoda by Willen Lake.

Throughout the year, I had visits to Milton Keynes University Hospital, the John Radcliffe Hospital and the Churchill Hospital, Oxford, University College Hospital London, and clinics in both Milton Keynes and Oxford, as doctors continue to monitor my progress following a stroke almost four years ago and as I continue to have concerns about my sarcoidosis and B12 levels.

A health scare caused me to cancel a planned visit to Dublin in June, but I was back in Dublin in August and December for family visits and a pre-Christmas book launch, staying in Rathmines and Harcourt Street.

The pilgrim arrives at Lichfield Cathedral in afternoon summer sunshine

I stayed at home in Stony Stratford while Charlotte visited Kuching and Singapore this year, but I did return to Crete, spending Holy Week and Easter in Rethymnon. There was time to meet old friends in Rethymnon, Platanias, Tsesmes, Iraklion and Panormos, and walks on the beaches and around the harbours. But this was also a time for pilgrimage and for spiritual retreat.

I also need my regular retreats and spiritual refreshment in the Chapel of Saint John’s Hospital, Lichfield, and in Lichfield Cathedral, including the mid-day Eucharist and Choral Evensong. There were four return visits to Lichfield, and three each to Tamworth and Comberford during the year.

These included speaking in the Comberford Chapel in Saint Editha’s Church on the tercentenary of the Comberford family memorial plaque erected by Joseph Comerford in 1725, being a guest at the opening of the new facilities for Lichfield Discovered in the Old Grammar School on John Street, Lichfield, and work on Samuel Johnson that still has to bear fruit.

I was at the patronal festival celebrations in Saint John’s, had lunch in the Hedgehog, walked along Cross in Hand Lane, in Beacon Park and by Stowe Pool and climbed Borrowcop Hill in Lichfield, walked by the Tame in Tamworth and through the fields and by the river in Comberford, and visited both Comberford Hall and the Moat House, the former Comberford family home on Lichfield Street in Tamworth.

A visit to Comberford Hall in April sunshine

My continuing research on the work of the Stony Stratford architect Edward Swinfen Harris has brought me to Addington, Buckingham, Maids Moreton, Newport Pagnell, Road and Wolverton and back to Stony Stratford, and brought invitations to speak at events organised by the Milton Keynes Forum for Heritage Week, the Friends of Stony Stratford Library, the Wolverton and District Archaeological Society and the architecture group of the University of the Third Age in Buckingham.

There have been four or five visits to Oxford, including one overnight visit. But apart from hospital appointments, these have included opportunities to browse in the bookshops, visit college chapels, to walk by the river and to attend Choral Evensong in Pusey House. Regrettably, I never got to attend the ‘Receiving Nicaea’ conference in Pusey House last month. Nor did I get to Cambridge this year, and another conference I missed this year was ‘Rebooting Ecumenism: New Paradigms for the 21st Century’, organised by the Institute for Orthodox Christian Studies in Cambridge earlier this month.

We stayed over in York twice during family visits in January and September, which also included visits to Durham Cathedral and Durham Cathedral for the first time and family meals in Harrogate and York, and Sunday mornings in Saint Olave’s Church, York.

My visits to London included Choral Evensong in Southwark Cathedral marking the retirement of Paul Timms, coffee with family members and friends in Friends’ House, visits to churches in Bloomsbury, Clarence Gate, Fitzrovia, Marylebone, Mayfair and Soho and close to Euston Station. On one visit to London in February, I tripped and fell on Oxford Street, badly injuring many part of my face and I ended up in A&E in UCL Hospital in London.

There has been afternoon tea at Saint Guthlac’s Church in Passenham, another guided tour of Bradwell Abbey, pleasant afternoon and evening visits toand meals in Ye Olde Swan in Woughton on the Green, the Swan Inn in Milton Keynes village, the Black Horse, Great Linford, the Cock Hotel in Stony Stratford, and the Cosy Club in Milton Keynes.

My ‘escapades’ and short visits during the year included exploring churches, architecture, local history and sometimes the local countryside in Addington, Aylesbury, Bedford, Bicester, Bradwell, Buckingham, Castlethorpe, Colchester, Durham, Deanshanger, Frating, Friern Barnet, Gawcott, Gerards Cross, Hanslope, Leighton Buzzard, Knaresborough, Leighton Buzzard, Linslade, Luton, Maids Moreton, Middleton, Newport Pagnell, Olney, Padbury, Seer Green, Shire Oak, Stantonbury, Thame, Towcester, Watford, Wavendon, Wolverton, Winslow and Watford. And there have been visits to synagogues and synagogue sites in London, Luton, Watford, Durham Colchester and Rethymnon, and to mosques in Luton.

There have been walks by the Thames in London, the Wear in Durham, the Ouse in York, and the Great Ouse in Stony Stratford and Buckingham, by the Grand Union Canal at Campbell Wharf, and in Cosgrove, Great Linford, Leighton Buzzard, Wolverton and Woughton in the Green and by Willen Lake.

I have enjoyed Cricket on long sunny Saturday afternoons throughout the summer, spent some afternoons watching Irish and English rugby in the Old George, and I have been entertained and delighted by Aston Villa’s record-breaking performance in the Premiership that came to end last night with a stunning defeat by Arsenal. I have enjoyed street art in London, Oxford, Wolverton and Dublin, Greek coffee mornings and festivals in Stony Stratford, meals out in Milton Keynes, Harrogate, Stony Stratford, York, Dublin, Lichfield, Great Linford, Tamworth and Cosgrove, and explored bookshops in Oxford, London and Dublin, and had my first visits that I can recall to both Hatchard’s and Dillons bookshops in London.

With Professor Salvador Ryan (editor, second from left) and some of the other contributors at the launch of ‘Childhood and the Irish, A miscellany’ in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, on 1 December 2025

My publications this year included two chapters in Salvador Ryan’s latest book, Childhood and the Irish, A miscellany (Dublin: Wordwell), launched in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, at the beginning of this month; a brief introduction to ‘Diversity in Sarawak’ in Pray with the World Church: Prayers And Reflections from The Anglican Communion, 1 June 2025 – 29 November 2025 (London: USPG); a paper on ‘The Ikerrin Crown’, in Under Crimblin Hill, Historical journal of Dunkerrin Parish History Society (Vol V, 2026); a book review in the Irish Theological Quarterly (Maynooth, Volume 90 Issue 2, April 2025); and photographs in the Co Clare Visitor Guide and the County Kerry Visitor Guide (ed Sally Davies), and in Herald Malaysia. I have also been cited in a new Spanish book on the Duke of Wharton, who had Comerford family connections and links with Rathfarnham Castle.

I continue to blog twice a day, and this blog has had about 11.5 million hits this year alone, over half the total of 21 million hits since I began blogging over 15 years ago in August 2010.

During the year, I have celebrated the 25th anniversary of my ordination to the diaconate, and in the year to come I shall celebrate the 25th anniversary of my ordination to the priesthood. It is almost four years since I retired, and I continue to find support from colleagues at local clergy meetings, which took place this year in Wavendon, Furzton, Water Eaton, Shenley Church End and Wolverton.

Summer sunshine in Beacon Park during a visit to Lichfield

Although I missed this year’s USPG conference in Swanwick, Derbyshire, I continue to support the work of USPG, writing for the Prayer Diary, taking part in this year’s celebrations of Founder’s Day or Bray Day in Saint James’s Church, Piccadilly, and drawing on USPG prayers for own prayer diary on this blog each morning.

I continue to sing with the choir in Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church, Stony Stratford, where I am involved in leading intercessions and readings. Charlotte and I were invited guests at the visit of Archbishop Nikitas to the Greek Orthodox Church in Stony Stratford, I spent Kol Nidre, the evening of Yom Kippur, in my local synagogue in Milton Keynes, and we attended the Holocaust Memorial Day commemoration in Christ the Cornerstone Church in Milton Keynes.

Locally, I am a member of the Town Centre Working Group of Stony Stratford Town Council, I am a trustee of the Retreat, a local almshouse and charity, I am part of the Stony Playreaders, currently rehearsing for production in the Stony Words Festival next month, and I was asked toplay Santa in Stony Stratford at the Christmas Fair and Farmers Market in the Market Square.

With Archbishop Nikitas at Matins and the Divine Liturgy during his visit to the Greek Orthodox Church in Stony Stratford

This past year must not become Trump’s year, with his violence, vulgarity and vitriol, stoking up racism and hatred, shattering the lives and hopes of families, the marginalised and the most vulnerable, denying any wrong-doing yet suppressing the Epstein files and shifting the blame to the BBC and to journalists in other mainstream media who asking plain and direct questions. Nor must we allow his capricious and authoritarian rule to dim our hopes for the future.

Instead, for me, the Person of the Year is Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde, who spoke truth to power at the inaugural prayer service in Washington National Cathedral in January.

She spoke directly to Trump with a plea for mercy toward LGBTQ people and immigrant families, and then suffered a torrent of attacks and even calls for her deportation for defending. Her response was clear, sI am not going to apologize for asking for mercy for others.’

She called on him ‘to have mercy upon the people in our country who are scared now … some who fear for their lives.’

The backlash was swift and severe, but many theologians welcomed her sermon as a clear depiction of moral leadership and moral clarity, her book How We Learn to Be Brave: Decisive Moments in Life and Faith, has become a New York Times bestseller, and she was invited to deliver a Christmas meditation on BBC Radio 4.

Preaching at the funeral of Dr Jane Goodall in Washington National Cathedral, Bishop Budde said: ‘In the place where I am now, I want to make sure that you understand that each of you has a role to play. Even where the planet is dark, there is still hope. Get up. Go ahead. Do something. Move to preserve our beautiful planet for all living beings.’

‘We can do this,’ she has said throughout the year, ‘especially if we remember we are never alone. Together, God will work through us to bring about the kind of society, the kind of community we all deserve and that we want to pass on to those who come after us. Take good care, have courage, and remember that together, we can all be brave.’

I am enveloped in Love, upheld by Faith, encouraged by Hope. The sun will rise tomorrow.

Happy New Year.

The sun sets on another year … looking across Stowe Pool to Lichfield Cathedral after sunset (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

31 December 2024

As the sun sets on 2024,
I look back on the past year,
and wonder about a world
that has Nowhere to go

The sun sets on 2024 … sunset at the harbour in Rethymnon in Crete (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Patrick Comerford

As the sun sets on 2024, and as I look forward to the New Year and the promises of 2025, I find it helpful this evening to look back on the past year, with all its blessings, and at both the new and the missed opportunities.

The year began on a very low note, with two of us feeling sorry for ourselves and isolated with another round of Covid-19, with no opportunity and no inclination to ring in the New Year. Of course, we recovered, and it is good to reflect on what an interesting year this has been.

As well as visiting places throughout Ireland, north and south, and England, my travels this year brought me to France, Greece, the Netherlands, Singapore and Kuching in East Malaysia.

Presenting a church bell to Father Jeffry Renos Nawie, Saint Matthias Chapel and the people of Sinar Baru

We spent almost five weeks in Kuching (15 October to 18 November), staying for the first week in the Marian, a boutique hotel that had once been the diocesan guesthouse, and before that a school boarding house for a girls’ school and the home of the Ong family.

For the rest of our visit, we stayed for four weeks in Charlotte’s flat in Chinatown, in the heart of the old town of Kuching.

In the past, I have had many working visits to Japan, Korea, China and Hong Kong in East Asia, but this was my first time to visit south-east Asia.

The highlights of the those five weeks in Sarawak included an afternoon on Damai Beach on the shores of the South China Sea as Charlotte and I celebrated our first wedding anniversary, seeing the Orangutans in Semenggoh Nature Reserve south of Kuching, a morning at the Sarawak Cultural Village, and a day in BaKo National Park.

We crossed the river on sampans at night, took a river cruise at sunset, ate out with family members and friends, went swimming in the pool at the Marian, and learned about the work in Kuching of the Irish architect Denis Santry from Cork. We also visited many cathedrals, churches, mosques, a Sikh temple and Chinese or Taoist and Buddhist temples, a theological college and graveyards. I even went in search of the Jewish community of Kuching that never existed.

Father Jeffry Renos Nawie of Saint Augustine’s Church, Mambong, brought us on whistle-stop tours of up to 20 churches in the Diocese of Kuching, including the seven churches and chapels in his own mission district.

In a thank-offering to celebrate our first wedding anniversary, Charlotte and I presented a new church bell to Father Jeffry, Saint Matthias Chapel and the people of Sinar Baru.

There were two stopovers in Singapore in October and November. Because of flight cancellations and rerouting, we missed the first opportunity to stay over in Singapore. But on the return journey we stayed in the Chinatown district of Singapore, visited many of the major sites, and, of course, sought out the street art, took a boat trip on the river and sipped a Singapore Sling in Raffles Hotel.

Once again, I went in search of churches, cathedrals, synagogues, mosques and Hindu, Buddhist and Chinese temples. It was particularly interesting to see the influence of five key Irish figures on the layout, streets and architecture of Singapore: Sir Orfeur Cavenagh from Wexford, George Drumgoole Coleman from Drogheda, and Denis Santry and Denis Lane McSwiney, both from Cork, and William Cuppage from Dublin.

Early morning on Rue Saint Séverin, in the Latin Quarter of Paris, off the Boulevard Saint-Michel (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

My optimum definition of visiting somewhere is staying overnight. Using that yardstick, I have slept in 15 different beds in the past 12 months – not counting the sleeps I tried to catch on two overnight flights between Paris and Singapore, but including an unexpected stay in an hotel at Schiphol Airport in October when our flight from Birmingham to Amsterdam was delayed, and we were rerouted through Paris.

My minimum definition of visiting somewhere is if my feet are on the ground and I stop over long enough to have coffee and something to eat. This means we were in Paris three times this year: a delayed honeymoon in Paris in February, and two very brief stop-overs at Charles de Gaulle Airport in October and November on the way to and from Singapore and Kuching.

Our visit to Paris earlier in the year was what in reality was a delayed honeymoon, just two months after our wedding at the end of last year.

It was my first time to travel on the Eurostar, and we stayed in the Hotel Europe-Saint-Séverin on Rue St Séverin. We were in the heart of the Latin Quarter, a few steps away from the Boulevard Saint-Michel and across the river from Notre Dame Cathedral, where the restoration work was still under way but near completion.

We went in search of stories about Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, James Joyce and Samuel Beckett, I visited synagogues, churches and museums, and I found the house where Vladimir Nikolaievich Lossky, one of the more influential Orthodox theologians, had lived in the 1940s and 1960s.

The olive groves on the hillsides between Piskopianó and Koutouloufári above Hersonissos (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

I returned to Greece in April, spending almost a week between Western Easter and Orthodox Easter in Rethymnon, where I stayed in the Brascos Hotel, overlooking the Municipal Gardens and close to the old town and the Venetian harbour. Since the mid-1980s, Rethymnon has been the nearest I have to any home town in Greece.

There was time for coffee, drinks, and even a long lingering lunch or two with old friends in Rethymnon, Platanias, Koutouloufari, Piskopiano, Iraklion and Panormos.

I had walks on the beaches and harbours in Rethymnon, Platanias, Hersonissos and Panrmos, it was exhilarating to stroll again in the hills and by the olive groves in Koutouloufari and Piskopiano. And I visited some favourite old churches and monasteries, browsed in the bookshops in the narrow streets of the old town, and watched the sunset behind the harbour and the Fortezza.

Looking across Dublin Bay from Blackrock to Howth Head during a summer visit to Dublin (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

There were six visits to Ireland this year, including five return visits to Dublin. They included three family visits in June, August and shortly before Christmas this month. I stayed over on those three visits, in the Harcourt Hotel on Harcourt Street (June), the Martello Hotel in Bray, Co Wicklow (August), and the Travelodge in Rathmines (December).

During the visit in August, we had opportunities too to see the Iveagh Gardens in detail and to visit Newman House and the Museum of Literature Ireland (MoLI) on Saint Stephen’s Green.

We were in Belfast for two nights in September, when we were invited to a family celebration near Templepatrick, Co Antrim.

A school reunion in September involved lunch in Peploe’s restaurant on Saint Stephen’s when about 30 or more of us who left school at Gormanston, Co Meath, after the Leaving Certificate exams in 1969. It was surprising to see so many of us still looking hale and hearty in our early-to-mid 70s. But that lunch in September and a business meeting in October were flying visits, literally, flying into Dublin in the morning, and back to Birmingham late in the evening.

My family visit to Dublin shortly before Christmas was also an opportunity to hear about the current campaign to protect Kenilworth Square, Rathgar, from plans by Saint Mary’s College to develop its rugby and cricket facilities in the square.

Walking by the river and through Christchurch Meadows in Oxford (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

I have been living in Stony Stratford, on the northern edges of Milton Keynes, for almost three years, and it offers me many opportunities to explore neighbouring cities, towns and countryside, to return to parts of England I have known for most of my life, and to see some new parts of England that I am only beginning to explore on my ‘escapades’.

I was in Norwich for the first time this year, when we stayed there in March while visiting an old friend. This was also an opportunity to visit Norwich Cathedral, the house and church associated with Julian of Norwich, and some of the places associated with Quaker history.

I was in Oxford for hospital tests towards the end of the year, but there were visits to Oxford throughout the year, to meet an old friend from India who is an Orthodox priest and theologian, to visit the exhibition ‘Kafka, Making of an Icon’ in the Weston Library, for the Corpus Christi procession from the Chapel of Pusey House to Saint Barnabas, Jericho, to see Holman Hunt’s ‘Light of the World’ in the Chapel of Keble College and visit other churches and chapels, to follow parts of the ‘Alice in Wonderland’ trail, for long lingering pub lunches in the King’s Arms with friends, and time to browse in bookshops, especially Blackwells.

There were walks through Christchurch Meadows, by the Cherwell and the Isis and by the boathouses, and to search for the oldest and longest-established coffee house in Europe.

I was back in Cambridge three times this year – twice on the way to and from the USPG conference in High Leigh, and again in November for the seminar and celebrations in Westminster College marking the 25th anniversary of the Institute for Orthodox Christian Studies. During those visits I also had the opportunity drop in again to Sidney Sussex College.

There have been days in London amd short ‘escapades’ to Aston, Beachampton, Bedford, Blisworth, Eaton Socon and Eaton Ford, Hampstead, Handsworth, Hoddesdon, Lamport, Leicester, Loughton, Northampton, Roade, St Neots, and Woughton-on-the-Green, there were forays in search of the traditional coffee houses that give their names to streets in Coffee Hall in Milton Keynes, and there was another visit to the museum at Bletchley Park.

Each time I see Comberford and Comberford Hall between Tamworth and Lichfield I recall old family stories (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

I was in Lichfield and Tamworth throughout the year. In Lichfield, I attended the mid-day Eucharist and Choral Evensong in the cathedral, had lunch in the Hedgehog and went for long walks along Cross in Hand Lane, through Beacon Park and by Minster Pool and Stowe Pool.

In Tamworth, there were return visits to the Comberford Chapel in Saint Editha’s Collegiate Church and the Moat House, the former Comberford family home on Lichfield Street, and I was invited by the Tamworth and District Civic Society to deliver a lecture in April on the Wyatt architectural dynasty.

Each time I pass Comberford and Comberford Hall on the train between Tamworth and Lichfield, I continue to be filled with warm feelings and to recall past family stories.

However, one visit to Lichfield and Tamworth almost became a catastrophe when I lost my phone on the train. I never recovered it, and trying to recover contacts and update passwords and accounts remains a Sisyphean task even months later.

My researches on Comberford and Comerford links continued throughout the year. I was in Aston, near Birmingham, not only to visit the home of Aston Villa at Villa Park, but also to visit Aston Hall and to visit Saint Peter and Saint Paul Church to see an unusual Comberford family monument.

There were Comberford connections to explore closer to home too, at Stoke Bruerne in Northamptonshire and the neighbouring village of Shutlanger, where the house now known as the Monastery in Shutlanger was the main house on the Parles and Comberford estate in that part of Northamptonshire in the 15th and 16th centuries.

‘The Mother and Child’ sculpture by Glynn Williams in a courtyard in Milton Keynes University Hospital (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

The year began wrapped up in bed with two of us feeling very sorry for ourselved during yet another attack of Covid-19. But my major health concerns this year included monitoring my continuing recovery from a stroke almost three years ago, and monitoring the symptoms of my pulmonary sarcoidosis and a severe deficiency of Vitamin B-12.

I returned to Milton Keynes University Hospital on 18 March to remember the second anniversary of my stroke in March 2022. There were seven other visits to the hospital in Milton Keynes, in March, June, twice in July, August, October and November, for respiratory and cardiac tests and CT scans, and further tests in the Whitehouse Health Centre near Milton Keynes in October and the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, earlier this month.

I have yet another respiratory or lung test in Milton Keynes Hospital later this week.

I moved from High Street, Wexford, 50 years ago (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

This has been a year of milestone anniversaries in my life story, some of which have been a delight and pleasure, but some of which I have not responded to with the grace and generosity that I ought to expect even of myself:

It is 55 years since I finished school at Gormanston College (1969).

It is 50 years since I left Wexford and the Wexford People and moved to Dublin and The Irish Times in 1974 and got married the first time in Dublin.

It has been 45 years since I was student in Japan, based in Tokyo for a full term in 1979 on a fellowship from Journalistes en Europe and Nihon Shimbun Kyokai, and with the support of Douglas Gageby, editor of The Irish Times.

It has been 45 since years since I became involved in re-founding the Irish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) and as chair of Irish CND.

It has been 40 years since Mercier Press published my first book, Do You Want to Do for NATO? (1984).

It has been 40 years aince completing a Post-Graduate Diploma in Ecumenical Theology at the Irish School of Ecumenics and Trinity College Dublin in 1984, and beginning the BD course at the Kimmage Manor and the Pontifical University Maynooth.

It is 35 years since my elder son was born in 1989.

It has been 30 years since I was appointed Foreign Desk Editor of The Irish Times in 1994, and 30 years since I was commissioned in Christ Church Cathedral as a diocesan reader in the Church of Ireland.

It has been 25 years since I began training for ordination at the Church of Ireland Theological College (now CITI) in 1999.

It has been 20 years since my father died in December 2004.

It is 15 years since I stood down as chair of the Dublin University Far East Mission in 2009.

It has been 10 years since my mother died in May 2014.

The former Bea House on Pembroke Park … memories of student days at the Irish School of Ecumenics 40 years ago (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

I am still waiting for Permission to Officiate (PTO) in the Diocese of Oxford. It is a difficult and at times heart-breaking process, and more difficult in the major Church seasons such as Easter and Christmas, and as I look forward to the 25th anniversary of my ordination as deacon in 2000.

But the local clergy in the Milton Keynes deanery have gone out of their way to welcome me to chapter meetings in the past year in local churches and parishes, including Bletchley, Shenley, Shenley Church End, Wavenden and Wolverton.

I continue to sing with the bass line in the parish choir in the Church of Saint Mary and Saint Giles, Stony Stratford. We rehearse each Wednesday, sing at the Parish Eucharist most Sundays, and we have also sung in All Saints’ Church, Calverton.

I attended the Cathedral Eucharist in Saint Thomas’s Cathedral each Sunday while we were staying in Kuching. During those five weeks, I visited the two cathedrals in Kuching and countless churches throughout the Diocese of Kuching.

There have been visits to Christ Church, Oxford, Lichfield Cathedral, Southwark Cathedral, Saint Anne’s Cathedral, Belfast, St Alban’s Cathedral, Leicester Cathedral, the two cathedrals in Norwich, the cathedrals in Rethymnon and Iraklion in Crete, the two cathedrals in Dublin, Christ Church and Saint Patrick’s, the two cathedrals in Kuching, Saint Thomas’s and Saint Joseph’s, and the two cathedrals in Singapore, Saint Andrew’s and the Good Shepherd.

Although I am no longer a trustee of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), I continue to be involved in its work, and deaw on the USPG prayer diary in my own online prayer diary each morning. I took part in the annual conference of USPG in High Leigh, near Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, in July, when I was invited to lead the intercessions at the Eucharist on the closing day, and attended the annual founders’ day celebrations for USPG and SPCK in Saint Alban’s Church, Holborn, earlier in the year.

I watched the new iconostasis being put in place in the Greek Orthodox Church in Stony Stratford, where I have been warmly welcomed at the Good Friday and Easter liturgies and other celebrations, as well as numerous coffee mornings.

As well as churches, cathedrals and synagogues, there have been visits to mosques in England, Kuching and Singapore, and to Buddhist, Chinese or Taoist, Hindu, Jain and Sikh temples.

I took part in the Holocaust Memorial Day commemoration at the MK Rose in Campbell Park, Milton Keynes, and the Hiroshima Day commemorations at the Japanese Peace Pagoda by Willen Lake, and attended the Kol Nidre Service at Yom Kippur and the Chanukah party last weekend in our local synagogue.

Sunday afternoon by the beach at Bako in Sarawak looking out at the South China Sea (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

During the summer months, Charlotte organised a street party, so we all got to know each other better as neighbours in Church Mews and White Horse Lane.

Living off the High Street in Stony Stratford for almost three years now, I miss being close to the sea, and opportunities to walk on a beach or by the sea. But during one visit to Dublin there were opportunities for walks by the shore in both Blackrock and Bray; there were walks on the beaches in Rethymnon, Platanias and Panormos and by the harbours in Rethymnon and Iraklion in Crete; and walks on the beaches in Sarawak in Bako National Park and by the South China Sea at Damai Beach Resort.

There were walks by the Ouse in Stony Stratford, Bedford and St Neots, the Cam in Cambridge, the Cherwell and the Isis or Thames and the boat clubs in Oxford, the Thames in London, the Liffey in Dublin, the Seine in Paris and by the rivers in Kuching and Singapore; there were strolls by Willen Lake in Milton Keynes and the Balancing Lakes near Wolverton; I had canal-side walks in Great Linford, Stoke Bruerne and Wolverton; there were boat trips on the canal in Stoke Bruerne, on the rivers in Kuching and Singapore and in Bako National Park in Sarawak; and there was time to enjoy the regatta and Dragon Boat races in Kuching.

Although I walk 3-5 km a day, I remain a couch potato when it comes to sports. But I was an enthusiastic television fan of the Irish rugby team, of the Irish and English rowers in the Olympics and the Cambridge crew in the boat race, enjoyed the spectacular opening and closing ceremonies at the Paris Olympics, enjoyed the Euros 2024, and kept up-to-date with results for Aston Villa, the Leinster rugby team and the Wexford hurlers.

A walk by the canal near Great Linford (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

I continue to contribute to books, write papers and reviews for journals and magazines, and some of my photographs have been published too in books, magazines – and even in one calendar for next year.

My publications in 2024 included the Προλογος (‘Foreword’) in Ελληνικα Δημοτικα Τραγουδια, Greek Folk Songs by Panos Karagiorgos, (Thessaloniki, Εκδοτικος Οικος Κ & Μ Σταμουλη); a paper on ‘The Lamport Crucifix’ and photographs in 50 Years of the Lamport Hall Preservation Trust, edited by Catriona Finlayson (Lamport, 2024); a short description of ‘Bourke’s House’ in Denis O’Shaughnessy’s The Story of Athlunkard Street, 1824-2024 (Limerick, 2024), which has run to three printings and has sold out each time; the ‘Foreword’ and a photograph in Rod Smith’s Clancarty – the high times and humble of a noble Irish family (Tauranga, New Zealand: Eyeglass Press); and a small, six-page pamphlet with Sarah Friedman, Milton Keynes & District Reform Synagogue: an introduction, with six of my photographs.

I wrote a paper on Saint Patrick for Conversations, a new journal edited by Bernard Treacy and published by Dominican Publications in Dublin; and wrote a book review for The Journal of Malankara Orthodox Theological Studies, published by the Orthodox Theological Seminary in Kerala, India.

There were features and photographs about Bishop Richard Rawle, a 19th century Vicar of Tamworth and SPG-supported Bishop in Trinidad, and about the stained glass artist William Wailes in Tamworth Heritage Magazine; a photograph of Bryce House illustrating February 2025, in ‘Garnish Island Calendar 2025’ produced for a school, Glengarriff, Co Cork; and a photograph in The Liberty, a local newspaper in Dublin. I also continue to write occasionally for The Irish Times.

We visited Lamport Hall in rural Northamptonshire for the launch of Catriona Finlayson’s lavishly illustrated 50 Years of the Lamport Hall Preservation Trust, and met many of the other contributors to the publication.

I was supposed to launch Rod Smith’s book, Clancarty – the high times and humble of a noble Irish family, on the history of the Trench family in London in October. But, in my haste to get to London on time, I boarded the wrong train at Milton Keynes, and ended up instead in Crewe. A return train was never going to get me back to London on time. My embarrassment was redeemed in part, I hope, by recording what I had planned to say first on the train and later when I got back to Stony Stratford, and posting both recordings on YouTube.

I felt so sorry for Rod Smith, who had travelled all the way from New Zealand for the book launch, and we had met in Hampstead a few days earlier to plan what I was going to say. I could only hope the other book launch in Ballinasloe was less of a disaster.

I continue to blog about twice a day, with a prayer diary each morning and a second posting later in the day.

Thoughts shared for the launch of Rod Smith’s book ‘Clancarty – the high times and humble of a noble Irish family’ in London (Patrick Comerford, 2024)

I continue to serve as a trustee of the Retreat, a local almshouse off the High Street in Stony Stratford, and took part in a training day for almshouse trustees in Birmingham.

Throughout the year I have been involved in the Town Centre Working Group, a committee of Stony Stratford Town Council and successfully completing a commission for a public sculpture for Stony Stratford. In the course of that project, I have visited and photographed public sculptures already in situ in Stony Stratford, Wolverton, the campus of the Open University in Milton Keynes and in the grounds of Tamworth Castle.

It was a duty and a privilege to vote in this year’s local and general elections in May and July. I canvassed on the day of the general election and while I am pleased with the election results, including the results in Milton Keynes and Lichfield, I am concerned about the rise of Farage and Reform as part of the rise of the far-right across Europe and North America.

I was in Dublin to vote in the European elections, but this year’s general election in Ireland is probably the first I have not been able to vote in. From a distance, I was sorry to see my old friend Brendan Howlin retire from politics, I was delighted to see George Lawlor, former Mayor of Wexford, elected to the Dail, and I could breathe a sigh of relief that the expected upsurge in support for Sinn Fein was never realised.


A morning with the orangutans in Semenggoh Wildlife Centre (Patrick Comerford, 2024)


On the overnight flight from Paris to Singapore in October, I found it difficult to sleep and kept my eye on the flight path. It was interesting how many conflict zones had to be avoided: Ukraine, Russia, Syria, Israel, the West Bank, Yemen, many parts of the Gulf, Afghanistan … It made the map more interesting, but may have added up to an extra hour to the flight time, and made me more acutely aware of how fragile the world is.

Of course, I am deeply concerned about the continuing aggressive war Russia is waging in Ukraine and the conflicts being fought on so many fronts in the Middle East – in Gaza, Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen.

Of course, I am deeply concerned about the plight of refugees the world seems to have forgotten trying to cross the Mediterranean and the Channel and living in hellish conditions in northern France, on Greek islands, and in so many places across the world.

Of course, I am worried about the real threat Nigel Farage and his party could still pose to democracy in Britain, and about the rise of the far throughout Europe.

Of course, I am worried about the rise in antisemitism, Islamophobia, racism and misogyny, remembering that January 2025 marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camps, and that the coming year marks the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II.

And, of course, I am worried about the damage that is going to be wreaked not only in the US but across the globe during another four years of a Trump presidency, with Elon Musk pulling the strings as the puppet master, and what this could mean for the world economy, for democracy, for human rights, the climate change, for fundamental justice, decency and honesty in the public sphere.

There is no Planet B, as one campaign slogan reminds us. There is Nowehere else to go.

During our visit to Norwich earlier this year, we had dinner one evening in the small town of Acle on the Norfolk Broads. But it was too late in the evening to think of going to Great Yarmouth 8 or 9 miles to the east for a walk by the sea.

There is a marshy area by the River Bure about three miles from Acle that was once known as Nowhere or No-Where. The villagers of Acle had salt-pans there to produce salt and in 1861 there were four inhabited houses in Nowehere and 16 residents. Originally, Nowhere was an extra-parochial liberty, until it was formally incorporated into Acle parish in 1862.

The name Nowhere no longer appears in maps and gazetteers, so I cannot say that this year I actually visited Nowehere. But then, there’s nowhere in Nowhere to have a coffee, and certainly nowhere there to stay overnight.

Happy New Year

Taking leave of 2024 and looking forward to 2025 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

31 December 2023

Looking back on 2023
and being equipped for
the walk ahead in 2024

In Comberford during one of this year’s many return visits to Lichfield and Tamworth (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Patrick Comerford

This has been a year that no-one could have predicted: the war that has engulfed Gaza, Israel and Palestine since 7 October, the war that continues in Ukraine and Russia and that is about to enter its third year, the return of Covid (almost with a vengeance), the rise in the cost of living that is drawing more and more families into an ever-descending vortex of poverty, and the housing crisis in Britain, Ireland and many other European countries.

This year has seen the continuing rise of the far-right reach new heights and given expression in the election results in the Netherlands, the frightening rise of antisemitism across the world, the abhorrent prospect of Donald Trump returning to power, the attacks on migrants in Dublin in May, the racist riots in Dublin in November and the attack on an hotel in Co Galway shortly before Christmas.

The sad message to many migrants arriving in Ireland, Britain – and in many other countries – this Christmas was definitely: ‘There is no room in the inn.’

The so-called ‘mainstream right’ has been seen to embrace the far-right. It went almost unnoticed in the British media that Rishi Sunak embraced the Italian prime minister and had taken part in a rally organised by her party, the political heir to Mussolini’s fascists. I have tried to image how the Daily Mail or the Daily Express would respond to a Labour politician attending a similar event with the political heirs of Stalin in central or eastern Europe.

Meanwhile, that sector of the media refuses to take the government to task for the failure to fund the NHS properly and to invest in its ffuture. The very people who thought up the slogan on the big red bus during the Brexit campaign have very short memories indeed. The by-election results in Tamworth and many other constituencies offer some hope for an interestng general election in 2024.

This has been the hottest year on record, and everyone feels the consequences of global warming, with rising temperatures and rising flood waters.

In Greece, it was a year of two elections, a year when it seemed thousands of migrants would have their status legitimised to cope with labour shortages, when peace and co-operation with Turkey seemed possible, and the debate over the Parthenon marbles reached new levels when Rishi Sunak lost his marbles and snubbed the Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis during a visit to London.

In Ireland, the 25th anniversary of the Belfast Agreement was marked not so much by Joe Biden’s visit but by the DUP continuing to boycott the Stormont Assembly and Sinn Fein MPs continuing to refuse to take their seats in Westminster.

In Rugby, this was the year Ireland won the Grand Slam but lost to New Zealand in the quarter finals of the Rugby World Cup.

This was also a year that saw Irish people being rescued from the conflict in Sudan, the year of the downfall of Ryan Tubridy, of Dee Forbes and of the board of RTÉ.

This year also saw the deaths of two Big Bens: Ben Dunne and Ben Briscoe. It was cringing to hear Sinn Fein politicians pay tribute to Ben Dunne, without mentioning that the IRA had kidnapped him and that the ransom money probably paid for many Sinn Fein and IRA activities.

This was the year Ireland mourned Sinead O’Connor and Shane MacGowan, and Christy Dignam of Aslan. But there were other great Irish cultural figures who died this year too, including the Kilkenny-born playwright Tom Kilroy, the artists Camille and Souter Graham Knuttel, the historian Dermot Keogh, the Jesuit theologian and sociologist Micheál Mac Gréil, and the Dublin-born actor Michael Gambon.

Former colleagues in The Irish Times who died during the year include Noel McFarlane, Derek Richards, Iain Pratt, Michael Viney and Peter Thursfield.

Among my friends and other colleagues who died this year were Canon Anna Matthews of Cambridge, who had often asked me to return and preach in Saint Bene’t’s Church; Jane Dayus-Hinch, who I got to know through many activities in Lichfield; Professor Petros Florides of TCD, the Cypriot-born mathematician who was always quick to describe me as a ‘true Philhellene’; Patsy Lyle, a former President of the Irish Hellenic Society; Canon John McKegney, who once invited me to Armagh to preach through Good Friday; and the Revd Maedbh O’Herlihy, who was always welcoming in Achill and who fought a brave battle with Motor Neurone Disease. Pat Arrowsmith, who I knew in my CND days also died this year.

Two of my former lecturers also died this year: the Augustinian theologian Gabriel Daly had taught on some of the modules at the Irish School of Ecumenics, and I had attended lectures in Cambridge and Thessaloniki by the Orthodox theologian Metropolitan John (Zizioulas) of Pergamon.

Deaths in my extended family included my ‘distant cousin’ Kevin Martin (ז״ל‎) in June, shortly after we had lunch in London. We had a shared interest in family history and Sephardic genealogy, including the overlapping stories of the Comerford, Mendoza, Martinez or Martin and Nunez families. I had missed the opportunity to celebrate Hanukkah and his birthday with him in Golder’s Green a year ago. But we had kept in touch week-by-week and we had hoped to meet again soon.

Francis Maurice (Frank) Comerford (1927-2023), who died in London earlier this year at the age of 95, was the longest-serving leader of the 143-year-old The Stage newspaper and digital platform.

The Hungarian Parliament on the banks of the Danube … we visited Hungary and Finland in 2023 to see USPG’s work with Ukrainian refugees (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Although I never did manage to keep that promise to myself to get back to Greece this year, there was some interesting travel this year. This included visits with Charlotte to Hungary and Finland on behalf of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), to see church-linked projects working with Ukrainian refugees in Budapest and Helsinki. We also visited Prague to celebrate Charlotte’s birthday in the Czech capital.

In addition, there were five visits to Ireland this year. I was in Dublin in March to carry out research in the RCB Library for a chapter in a book that was published in Limerick later in the year. I stayed in Rathmines, and took this opportunity for a return visit to the Church of Ireland Theological Institute.

There were two family birthdays in Dublin, when I stayed in Rathmines in June and in Camden Street in August.

We were in Dublin again in June, and stayed in Burlington Road while I was being interviewed in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, by television programme makers from Montenegro. They are producing a documentary about Prince Milo of Montenegro, who is buried at Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, and Marko Zekov Popović, the ‘Hereditary Royal Standard Bearer of Montenegro’, whose ashes are in an urn on a shelf in Christ Church Cathedral.

I missed the launch in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, at the end of November of Christmas and the Irish, a new collection of essays edited by Professor Salvador Ryan of Maynooth, and that includes three contributions from me. I so wanted to be at this book launch – but only realised when I got to Luton Airport that I had left my passport back in Stony Stratford. Even seasoned and experienced travellers can make the daftest of mistakes.

My fifth visit to Dublin this year – it ought to have been my sixth – was a family visit in the week before Christmas, when I stayed once again in Rathmines.

There have been opportunities too to travel around England this year, with many visits to London, Oxford, Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Tamworth, Lichfield and York. The cathedrals I have visited this year include Christ Church in Dublin and in Oxford, the two cathedrals in Coventry, Southwark and Saint Paul’s in London, Northampton Cathedral, York Minster, and, of course, Lichfield Cathedral, as well as the ruins of Osney Abbey and Whitby Abbey and the cathedrals in Budapest, Helsinki and Prague.

We stayed in York twice this year (in May and September-October), with visits to Knaresborough, Harrogate, Whitby and Whitby Abbey, Hebden Bridge, Heptonstall and Bishopthorpe. We visited the locations of ‘Happy Valley’ and the grave of Sylvia Plath, walked on the beach at Robin Hood’s Bay, and I also attended the Choral Eucharist in York Minster.

Nearer to home, there have been day trips or ‘escapades’ visiting cities, town and villages near here, including Coventry, Rugby, Long Buckby, Aylesbury, Buckingham, Bicester, Berkhamsted, Bletchley, Crick and Winslow. And there have been days I have wandered aimlessly around Milton Keynes and Campbell Park, looking out for interesting sculptures and public art.

On Comberford Road in Tamworth … continuing my family history research (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

I was back in Lichfield at least five times, with walks around Stowe Pool, Minster Pool and along Cross in Hand Lane and a two-day self-guided retreat in Lichfield Cathedral, and I was in Tamworth three or four times, visiting both the Moat House and Comberford itself. My continuing family history research also brought me to Yelvertoft, where Canon Henry Comberford of Lichfield Cathedral was once the rector; Watford, by the Watford Gap, in search of the former Comberford Manor; and Wednesbury, which had links with the Comberford family in the 16th and 17th centuries.

I am retired and I have no official role in the Diocese of Oxford. But I renewed my ordination vows in Christ Church, Oxford, at the Chrism Eucharist on Maundy Thursday. I sing in the Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church, Stony Stratford, and alternate my Sunday church attendance between Stony Stratford, and Holy Trinity Church, Old Wolverton.

I find collegiality, friendship and support in the monthly meetings of the Milton Keynes Chapter of clergy, I have become a trustee of the Retreat, a Church-linked almshouse in Stony Stratford with four residents in four residential units, and Tamworth and District Civic Society invited me to say grace at their annual dinner in the Castle Hotel earlier this year.

I continue to search for and photograph synagogues and the sites of historic synagogues, with visits to synagogues and their sites in London, Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Coventry, Northampton, Oxford, Bletchley, Wolverton, New Bradwell, Haversham, Berkhamsted, Knaresborough, Dublin, Budapest, Helsinki and return visits to synagogues in Prague, with a first-time visit to the Jerusalem synagogue in Prague.

This interest brought an invitation to speak in Milton Keynes and District Reformed Synagogue on ‘Synagogues of the World’ in April and to take part in the synagogue’s Open Day on 10 September.

Although I am no longer a trustee, I continue to engage in voluntary work for USPG. This year this has included editing the Lenten study guide, visiting Hungary and Finland, speaking as a volunteer at the Daventry Deanery Synod in Badby in Northamptonshire (Diocese of Peterborough), and taking part in the annual reunion in London. Sadly, I missed this year’s conference in Yarnfield Park in Stone, Staffordshire.

A new book on the Philhellenes published in Thessaloniki earlier this year (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

My writings and publications this year included co-authoring with Professor Panos Karagiorgas a bilingual, Greek/English book on the Philhellenes, published in Thessaloniki; editing Who is Our Neighbour?, this year’s Lenten study with USPG; a number of pieces in The Irish Times, including a major feature arising from my visit with USPG to Ukrainian refugees in Hungary and Finland; three essays in Salvador Ryan’s Christmas and the Irish; a chapter in a book in Limerick marking the ‘Decade of Centenaries’; and a journal paper on JD Bernal and his Sephardic family background.

In addition, I had photographs published in five books and one journal.

These publications this year have included:

• ‘The Sephardic family roots and heritage of John Desmond Bernal, Limerick scientist’, pp 60-66 in The Old Limerick Journal, ed Tom Donovan (Limerick: Limerick Museum, 72 pp), No 58, Winter 2023, with nine photographs.

• ‘Church-goers in Limerick During War and Revolution’, Chapter 6, pp 83-89, in Histories of Protestant Limerick, 1912-1923, ed Seán William Gannon and Brian Hughes (Limerick: Limerick City & County Council, 2023); with three photographs, pp 70-71.

• ‘The ‘Wexford Carol’ and the mystery surrounding some old and popular Christmas carols’, pp 72-77 in Christmas and the Irish: a miscellany, ed Salvador Ryan (Dublin: Wordwell Books, 2023, 403 pp, €25), with a photograph on p 71.

• ‘Molly Bloom’s Christmas Card: where Joycean fiction meets a real-life family’ is published in Christmas and the Irish: a miscellany, ed Salvador Ryan (Dublin: Wordwell Books, 2023, 403 pp, €25), pp 151-155, with a photograph on p 155.

• ‘‘We Three Kings of Orient are’: an Epiphany carol with Irish links’, pp 103-107 in Christmas and the Irish: a miscellany, ed Salvador Ryan (Dublin: Wordwell Books, 2023, 403 pp, €25).

• <<Ο Sir Richard Church και οι Ιρλανδοι Φιλελληνες στον Πολεμο των Ελληνων για την Ανεξαρτησια>>, pp 53-75, in Πανος Καραγιώργος και Patrick Comerford, Ο Φιλελληνισμος και η Ελληνικη Επανασταση του 1821 (Θεσσαλονικη: Εκδοτικος Οικος Κ κ Σταμουλη, 2023, 78 pp).

Who is Our Neighbour? (London: USPG, 2023, 48 pp), editor and Introduction, pp 5-6; a six-session study course for Lent 2023.

• A photograph (p 137) in: Jack Kavanagh, Always Ireland, An Insider’s Tour of the Emerald Isle (Washington DC: National Geographic, 2023, 336 pp, hb, $35).

• The cover photograph on: Tim Vivian, A Doorway into Thanks: Further Reflections on Scripture (Austin Macauley Publishers, London, Cambridge, New York, Sharjah, 2023, $14.95).

• Three photographs (pp 78, 165, 355) in: Hellgard Leckebusch, Singing our Song, the Memoirs of Hellgard Leckebusch (1944-2023), eds, Silke Püttmann and Kenneth Ferguson (Mettmann, NRW, Germany: Silke Püttmann, 2023, e-book).

I was the subject of a major interview with the American online journal ‘Profiles in Catholicism.’ I continue to blog each day, including a prayer diary each morning. This blog passed a number of landmarks a few weeks ago, passing the figure of 7 million hits in mid-August and 7.5 million hits at the end of November.

I have been asked to contribute to the Tamworth Heritage Magazine in 2024, I have been invited to write the foreword or prologue to a new bilingual book on Greek folk songs to be published in Thessaloniki early in the new year, a book review is about to be published in an Orthodox theological journal in India, and I have been asked to write a substantial paper for the launch of new theological e-journal being launched early in 2024. There are other active writing plans for the coming months, as well as photographs in two or three more forthcoming books.

Healthwise, I had a stroke last year (18 March 2022), but I am a stroke survivor not a stroke victim. I have sarcoidosis, but sarcoidosis does not have me. I have a severe Vitamin B12 deficiency, but I live a full and fulfilling life. I continued to have check-ups this year in hospitals in Oxford and Milton Keynes as they monitor and follow-up the effects of my stroke. I continue to receive regular B12 injections and to receive medication for my sarcoidosis.

My walking average is not as high as I hoped, but I have managed to keep the daily average above 4 km throughout the year, with hopes to improve on this next year.

Perhaps the most difficult problems, emotionally, legally and socially, were not health issues but the drawn-out court proceedings that eventually ended with the finalisation of my divorce case in Birmingham on 30 August. I hope never again to face not only the many legal problems and court cases, but also the online bullying that continues on at least one Facebook page from which I have been blocked, including wishes that I die soon and that I rot in hell.

But life is good. The highlight of the year was, undoubtedly, when Charlotte and I got married in Camden Town Hall on 3 November, with a reception for a very small group in the Boot and Flogger, a restaurant in Southwark, and the church blessing in the Harvard Chapel in Southwark Cathedral on 4 November.

The highlight of the year … Charlotte and I got married in November

I made plans last night for that long-promised return visit to Greece. I also hope thatin the year ahead of us Britain gets the election and the result the nation deserves.

What can I expect – what can any of us expect – in the year to come?

In my prayer diary on this blog earlier today, I referred to the theme this week in the Prayer Diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG, which is ‘Looking to 2024 – Freedom in Christ.’ This theme is introduced today by the Revd Duncan Dormor, USPG General Secretary, who says that ‘as we step into the new year, we know that our world is a deeply uncertain place … We do not know what lies ahead in 2024.’

He continues: ‘We can only step forward, as Paul noted, ‘by faith and not by sight.’

‘As individuals, as flesh and blood, we all crave freedom and security – freedom from injustice and violence, and the security that a good livelihood, friends, community, just laws and the government bring. And so our hearts naturally go out to all who live with deep insecurity and oppression.

‘As we are called by God to walk faithfully through 2024, so are we called to a freedom rooted in Christ. This is an active, life-giving freedom, a freedom that reaches out towards others.

‘It is expressed in our solidarity with our sisters and brothers, and with our neighbours, global and local. A solidarity that sets people free, ourselves and others. It begins when we come before our loving God in prayer, and it equips us for the walk ahead.’

May you be equipped for your walk ahead next year.



31 December 2022

A year of war and peace,
an end to old certainties
and of new beginnings

The Lichfield Peace Walk outside Lichfield Cathedral in August (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Patrick Comerford

So this is Christmas
And what have you done?
Another year over
And a new one just begun


John Lennon was the first Beatle to release a Christmas song after the breakup of the Beatles. After two years of activism by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, this song became a powerful protest song against the Vietnam War. The backing vocals come from the Harlem Community Choir, and was a powerful choice of children’s voices to deliver an anti-war message.

The release of the single ‘Happy Xmas (War Is Over)’ was delayed in Britain until November 1972, and it peaked at No 4 50 years ago. In a poll by ITV ten years ago in December 2012, it was voted ‘The Nation’s Favourite Christmas Song.’

Despite John Lennon’s yearning half a century ago, war is not over. Another year is over and a new one is about to begin. But the past year has been dominated by the war that began with the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and it looks like continuing for the coming year, if not for years to come.

During the past year, I attended demonstrations against the war in both Wexford and Dublin, spoke at anti-war protest in Milton Keynes, and continued to be involved in CND and the Anglican Pacifist Fellowship.

The war is affecting every aspect of life. Russia banned entry to the Taoiseach Micheál Martin and more than 50 other senior officials in response to Western sanctions over Ukraine. Governments throughout Europe are seeking to shift the blame for the rising costs of food and fuel onto the war. Every town and parish on these islands has been challenged to respond to the needs of Ukrainian refugees, and I hope to visit Budapest and Helsinki in the coming weeks to see the response to Ukrainian refugees by the Anglican mission agency USPG and other church agencies.

The past year in Britain saw the collapse of Boris Johnson’s political career – and perhaps even the collapse of the Tory vote and the implosion of the Conservative party – after private parties in Downing Street that ignored Covid lockdown restrictions. This has been the year of three Prime Ministers: Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak. In Ireland, it has been the year of two Taoisigh: Leo Varadkar took over as Taoiseach from Micheál Martin on 17 December.

The platinum jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II was soon followed by her death and the accession of King Charles III. It is interesting that the values he chose to emphasise in his first broadcast Christmas address include cultural diversity, inter-religious co-operation, the value of the NHS and the role of volunteers in food banks, homeless shelters and care homes.

This was also the year when everyone became aware of the imminent and looming threats posed by climate change. In Britain, this was a summer with record-breaking 40°C heatwave, while winter is chilly, windy, wet and sometimes snowy.

The cost of living crisis, marked by high inflation and rising energy bills and food prices, and the problems of households needing more air conditioning in summer and heating in winter, create a toxic cocktail that exacerbates both poverty and climate change.

It was a year too for taking the knee because Black Lives Matter. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled in Bristol, and it was good to observe personally how the statue of Cecil Rhodes has become an embarrassment in Oxford and the bust of Sir John Cass has been removed from an alcove in Saint Botolph without Aldgate Church in London.

Covid-19 is a continuing presence globally, and I fell a victim to the pandemic in March.

This was also the year of the World Cup. Yet despite the promises from all media outlets that this would provide them with an opportunity to expose Qatar and its abuse of human rights, including the rights of women, migrant workers and political dissenters, those promises were not delivered.

Nor should the World Cup overshadow other exciting sporting moments this year: on 5 November, the Irish rugby team had a 19-16 win over the reigning world champions South Africa in the Aviva Stadium in Dublin.

This year saw the death of Vicky Phelan, who died at the age of 48 on 14 November after a long and brave public campaign on cervical cancer checks.

Listening to John Lennon’s song from 50 years ago I am reminded that this was a year of anniversaries too: the centenary of the birth of the modern Irish state as the Irish Free State on 6 December 1922; the centenary of the publication of both James Joyce’s Ulysses and TS Eliot’s The Waste Land in 1922, and of the birth of the poet Philip Larkin that year; and the 50th anniversary of the death of Thomas Merton.

This year also brought an announcement of plans to reopen the Limerick to Foynes railway line for 2025. During my five years in West Limerick, I was vocal in advocating for this. It is a pity the line never reopened in time for me to enjoy its benefits while I was living in West Limerick.

With Canon John Bartlett in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin

I retired from parish ministry on 31 March after more than five years as Priest-in-Charge of the Rathkeale and Kilnaughtin Group of Parishes, which includes Saint Mary’s Church, Askeaton, Castletown Church, Kilcornan, and Holy Trinity Church, Rathkeale, Co Limerick, and Saint Brendan’s Church, Kilnaughtin (Tarbert), Co Kerry.

At the same time, I retired as Precentor of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, Saint Flannan’s Cathedral, Killaloe, Co Clare, and Saint Brendan’s Cathedral, Clonfert, Co Galway, as Diocesan Director of Ministerial Education, and as a member of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland and the Interfaith Working Group. Compassionate leave in March forced me to cancel a commitment to preaching in Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin, on Saint Patrick’s Day.

My parish ministry included being chaplain to hospitals in Newcastle West, Co Limerick, and Listowel, Co Kerry, chairing the board of Church Street School in Rathkeale, and membership of the secondary school boards in Coláiste Mhuire (Saint Mary’s College), Askeaton, Coláiste na Trócaire, Rathkeale, and Hazelwood College, Dromcolliher.

Before retiring, I was a member of the Episcopal Electoral College that elected Bishop Michael Burrows as Bishop of the newly-united diocese of Tuak, Limerick and Killaloe.

I celebrated my 70th birthday in Birmingham in January. But my health took a turn for the worse in March when I suffered a stroke in Milton Keynes. It was the gravest health scare I have experienced since I was diagnosed with pulmonary sarcoidosis. I was also diagnosed Covid positive in hospital in Milton Keynes. From Milton Keynes University Hospital I was transferred to John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, and later had a post-stroke procedure in hospital in Sheffield following an earlier consultation there.

These experiences through the year enhanced my appreciation of the NHS, but also intensified my feelings about how the NHS is not being properly funded and resourced by a government that prefers to give tax breaks to the rich and the corrupt.

I have settled into life in Stony Stratford, on the edges of Milton Keynes, since April. I am now up-to-date with my Covid-19 vaccinations, and am recovering well from my stroke thanks to loving attention and care.

I have travelled back and forth between England and Ireland throughout the year, with my last visit to Dublin shortly before Christmas to see family members.

Circumstances mean planned visits to Crete in April and Croatia ind May wer cancelled, and this is one of the few years – apart from the years of travel restrictions introduced by Covid – that I have not been in Greece since the late 1980s.

However, there was a mid-week break in Malta in January ahead of my birthday, and two days in Venice with Charlotte in July.

In Ireland, I have stayed in Askeaton, Dublin and – due to missed flights in Dublin – in Belfast. There were a few return visits to Wexford, and visits too to Galway, Co Clare and Co Kerry.

A return visit to the chapel of Saint John’s Hospital, Lichfield, this year (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

There were two return visits to Lichfield and Tamworth, when Charlotte and I stayed in the Hedgehog Vintage Inn in Lichfield and in the Castle Hotel in Tamworth, and I stayed with a friend in Lichfield.

In Lichfield, I visited Lichfield Cathedral and the Chapel in Saint John’s Hospital, which have been my ‘spiritual homes’ since my teens, and Saint Chad’s Church and Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Farewell. In Tamworth, Charlotte and I were given a personalised guided tour of the Moat House, the former Comberford family home on Lichfield Street, and we visited the Comberford Chapel in Saint Editha’s Church.

Throughout the year there have been about half a dozen visits to Birmingham, more than a dozen visits to London, and visits to Oxford, Sheffield and York, with visits to the cathedrals in Oxford, Southwark, Birmingham, Lichfield and Sheffield and to York Minster.

Stony Stratford and Milton Keynes, with their public transport connections, have provided opportunities to explore neighbouring villages, towns and cities, and to travel through the surrounding countryside. Apart from my stay in the John Radcliffe Hospital in March and April, I have been in Oxford to visit Christ Church, Pusey House, Oxford Synagogue, the Ashmolean Museum, a number of Oxford colleges and college chapels and for lunch with a visiting friend from Pakistan.

My country walks in England this year have included walks by the River Ouse, the Balancing Lakes and Willen Lake, and exploring the neighbouring towns, villages and churches of Buckinghamshire, Northamptonshire and Oxfordshire, including Cosgrove, Passenham, Winslow – where I visited Comerford Way – Old Stratford, Calverton, Wolverton, Bletchley, Newport Pagnell, Aylesbury, Buckingham, Banbury and Bloxham, where I visited Cumberford. During one visit to Lichfield, I also walked along Cross in Hand Lane through the countryside of south Staffordshire, to Farewell.

In Ireland, there were walks on the beach in Bray and Wicklow town in Co Wikclow; Courtown, Kilmuckridge and Morriscastle, Co Wexford; Loughshinny and Skerries, Co Dublin; Lahinch, Fintramore, Drumcreehy, and the Cliffs of Moher in Co Clare. There were walks along the quays in Wexford and Galway, by the River Dodder in Firhouse and Rathfarnham and the Liffey in Dublin, by the River Slaney in Ferrycarrig and Wexford, by the Shannon in Limerick, the Deel in Askeaton and Rathkeale, and the River Arra in Newcastle West, Co Limerick, by the Corrib in Galway, by the Falls and Cascades in Ennistymon, Co Clare, and by the shoreline in Kinvara, Co Galway.

With Metropolitan Kallistos Ware at an IOCS summer school in Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, a few years ago

The world paid attention to the deaths of Queen Elizabeth II, Pele and former Pope Benedict this year. For me, a number of friends and colleagues died this year. Friends from CND (Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament) who died this year included Bruce Kent, who I have known since 1976, Bill McSweeney, who also supervised my post-graduate research at the Irish School of Ecumenics, Rhoda MacManus, who I have known since she lived in Wexford in the 1970s, and who was an early supporter of CND.

Academic friends and colleagues who died this year include Canon John Bartlett, who was the Principal of the Church of Ireland Theological College when I was training for ordination in 1999-2000 and later a colleague on the chapter of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin; Metropolitan Kallistos (Ware) of Oxford, who was one of my lecturers in Cambridge at the Institute of Orthodox Studies; and Dr Christine Mangala Frost, who taught on several seminars at IOCS.

Friends from Wexford who died this year include Gerry Breen, Nicky Furlong, Hilary Murphy – I worked with all three in the Wexford People and all three were colleagues too as Wexford historians. Dr Jane Lyons, the Co Laois genealogist, also died this year.

Norman Watson, Hugh O’Shaughnessy, Dervla Murphy and Peter Byrne who died this year all worked for and wrote for The Irish Times during my many years there.

Tom McNamara of the Boley House, Keel, was a generous and genial friend for many years on Achill Island.

Along with Canon John Bartlett and Metropolitan Kallistos, other clerical friends and colleagues who died this year include Canon Cecil Wilson, who worked with during my four years at CMS; the Revd Trevor Kelly, one of my former students; the Very Revd George Chambers, former Dean of Limerick (1981-1986); the Ven Malcolm Shannon, former Archdeacon of Limerick (2001-2009); the Very Revd Alistair Grimason, Dean of Tuam and a member of the Episcopal Electoral College with me this year; and Bishop Brian Hannon, who once conducted a wedding in Tallaght when I was reader there.

Other deaths this year included the journalists Colm Keane, Jim Fahy, Paddy Murray, John Kelly, the broadcaster historian and journalist Eamon Phoenix, and the artist Pauline Bewick.

Recording my Hiroshima Day address for Irish CND at the Japanese Peace Pagoda at Willen Lake in Milton Keynes (Photograph: Charlotte Hunter, 2022)

Regrettably, after more than two decades, the editor has called time on my monthly column in the Church Review, the monthly magazine in the Diocese of Dublin and Glendalough. However, I continue to write, and my publications this year include:

1, ‘Barbara Heck and Philip Embury: Founders of American Methodism’, pp 109-111, in David Bracken, ed, Of Limerick Saints and Sinners (Dublin: Veritas, 2022, ISBN: 9781800970311), 266 pp.

2, ‘Mother Mary Whitty: Sign of the Cross in Korea’, pp 213-215, in David Bracken, ed, Of Limerick Saints and Sinners (Dublin: Veritas, 2022, ISBN: 9781800970311), 266 pp.

3, ‘For the Life of the World: Toward a Social Ethos of the Orthodox Church’ Studies in Christian Ethics, 35 (2), May 2022 (SAGE: Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore, Washington DC, Melbourne, ISBN 0953-9468), pp 342-359.

4, ‘Saint Patrick: the myths, the legends and his relevance to Ireland today,’ Reality (Redemptorist Communications), March 2022 (Vol 88 No 2 ISSN 0034-0960), pp 12-16.

5, ‘Study 4: Celtic Spirituality: A View from the Church of Ireland’, Living Stones, Living Hope, USPG Lent Study Course 2022 (London: USPG, 2022), pp 29-34.

6, Book Review: Fifty Catholic Churches to See Before You Die. By Elena Curti. Leominster: Gracewing, 2000. Pp 280. Price £14.99 (pbk). ISBN 978-0-85244-962-2, in The Irish Theological Quarterly (Maynooth), Vol 87 No 1 (February 2022), pp 78-80.

It was good to write once again for the Wexford People group of newspapers this year, almost half a century after I worked there, with features and a news report in the Wexford People, the Enniscorthy Guardian, the Gorey Guardian and the New Ross Standard on the Wexford family roots of Penny Mordaunt at the time she was making a bid for the leadership of the Tory Party.

I have continued to contribute occasional seasonal pieces to The Irish Times, 20 years after I took early retirement there in 2002. In addition, three photographs of mine appeared in the Clare Echo this year: one of the railway bridge in Ennistymon in September, and photographs of Corpus Christi Church in Lisdoonvarna and a shopfront in Ennistymon earlier this month.

I have been invited to contribute to a book next year on Christmas and the Irish edited by my friend and colleague, Professor Salvador Ryan of Maynooth, to a book on life in the Church of Ireland during the War of Independence for a planned book in Limerick, and to the Old Limerick Journal on the Sephardic and Limerick roots of the Irish-born scientist JD Bernal.

I have worked on liturgical and preaching resources for USPG for Advent and Christmas, and I have been involved in USPG in planning and editing a course for Lent 2023.

My blog has reached almost 6.5 million people by today, and on YouTube one video clip alone from the Lichfield Peace Walk four months ago has had about 33,000 views.

I remain involved in USPG, recording a Lenten reflection on Celtic Spirituality for USPG in the Franciscan Abbey in Askeaton, and taking part in the annual conference in High Leigh in July and in the USPG reunion in London in September.

I continue to be involved involved in interfaith issues, now in Milton Keynes and the Diocese of Oxford, and have visited synagogues in Dublin, Milton Keynes, Oxford, London, and Oxford.

I recorded my annual address for Irish CND’s Hiroshima Day commemorations in Dublin at the Japanese Peace Pagoda at Willen Lake. I visited th pagoda a few times this year, and I took part in the Hiroshima Day commemorations there on 6 August. I recorded a reflection for the Anglican Pacifist Fellowship on Saint Patrick’s Day. I also took part in the first stage of the Lichfield Peace Walk from Saint Chad’s Church and Lichfield Cathedral in August, accompanying the Thai Buddhist monks from King’s Bromley along Cross in Hand Lane as far as Farewell.

Sadly, both distance and health considerations mean I have decided to stand down as President of Irish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

My change in life circumstances means that I have also lost many of my friends among my clerical colleagues in Ireland.

But, of course, I am looking forward to 2023 and to the future. Despite my stroke last March, my first attack of Covid-19, and living with Sarcoidosis and regular B12 injections, I am fully vaccinated, I feel healthy and I am well looked after with tender and loving care.

My immediate plans include visits Hungary and Finland in the New Year to see work in the Diocese of Europe with refugees from Ukraine, supported by USPG, and Charlotte and I are planning to visit Kuching some time in 2023, when I look forward to learning about life in Sarawak and Malaysia.

My hopes for the New Year include returning to ordained ministry and to continue to enjoy life in Stony Stratford and Milton Keynes.

A very merry Christmas
And a happy new year,
Let’s hope it’s a good one
Without any fear


Happy New Year

A post-stroke hospital procedure in Sheffield (Photograph: Charlotte Hunter, 2022)